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Comment Re:Wow nice... (Score 2) 508

Yes, it's exactly the stupidest thing they could possibly do, with the possible exception of burning all issues of The Guardian for the next week or two.

But thugs just can't resist being thugs, just like snakes can't resist being snakes. Sure, there are copies, but that's all the more reason to smash this drive to smithereens.

Comment Re:Hilarious considering the Microsoft marketing (Score 4, Insightful) 379

One of the things that has bugged (oops) me about the NSA news is the assumption that non-US citizens aren't entitled to privacy. Here the NSA doesn't even need a warrant if it guesses (50%+1) that one of the people communicating is non-US. Why any foreign company would want to use a product from a company that can be forced to feed all info to the NSA is beyond my ability to understand but, then again, those paying for the privilege of using Microsoft products have always been a mystery to me.

Comment Re:You are a professional killer (Score 1) 207

Yes, Anonymous Coward is an appropriate name for you. Someone who signed up for the military following 9/11 certainly does not need to justify their actions.

Was the Iraq war a "good war?" No, not in my opinion. But that war wasn't started by the military. It was started by the unprosecuted war criminals who were almost voted into positions of power, men like George W "Decider" Bush, Dick "Dick" Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld.

Comment Re:Wrong by law (Score 1) 601

And a jury should engage in nullification, to prevent a heroic man from being further punished.

The government is not our country. Our country is defined by the constitution.

The government can be (and has been) bought. Our constitution cannot.

Comment Re:Since when (Score 1) 295

It does seem a bit unfair to build a Department of Snooping, Lying, and Cheating and then complain when it snoops, lies, and cheats. It's so sad that the United States government is now (and has been for at least fifty years) the most frightening enemy of the United States Constitution.

Submission + - NSA Surveillance May Have Dealt Major Blow To Global Internet Freedom Efforts (forbes.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Simply put, the US government has failed in its role as the "caretaker" of the internet. Although this was never an official designation, America controls much of the infrastructure, and many of the most popular services online are provided by a handful of American companies. The world is starting to sober up to the fact that much of what they've done online in the last decade is now cataloged in a top-secret facility somewhere in the United States. The goal has been to promote internet freedom around the world, but we may have also potentially created a blueprint for how authoritarian governments can store, track, and mine their citizens’ digital lives.

Comment just move the chairs Re:Multi-mode is old news (Score 1) 146

Really, what you want is a layout of chairs on the train that can easily be moved onto a plane's fuselage by a device that needn't fly. You don't want to make the train into a plane, you just want a convenient way to move people and their carryons into the fuselage without making them lift their buttocks an extra time.

Comment Re:Too bad they chose NH.... (Score 1) 701

The reason New Hampshire is functional is Boston. Yes, Boston is in Massachusetts, but southern New Hampshire is an easy commute to Boston and its northern suburbs. Massachusetts taxpayers provide all the high tech jobs and cultural amenities that the libertarians of New Hampshire want to have but don't want to pay for.

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